This is a list of submitted names in which the description contains the keywords god or of or mercy.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Ketie f Dutch (Rare)Dutch phonetical spelling of the English name
Katie. It is also possible that in some cases, this name is a rare Dutch diminutive of
Keet.
Ketilbjǫrg f Old NorseOld Norse combination of
ketill 'cauldron hat, helmet' and
bjǫrg 'help, deliverance'.
Ketilmundr m Old NorseCombination of Old Norse
ketill "kettle, cauldron, helmet" and
mundr "protection".
Ketino f GeorgianEither a diminutive or a variant of
Ketevan. A known bearer of this name is the Georgian master chess player Ketino Kachiani (b. 1971).
Ketti f LuxembourgishDiminutive of
Katharina. 'D’Maus Ketti' (
Ketti, the mouse in English) (1936) is a children's book by Luxembourgish writer Auguste Liesch.
Ketugay m & f JolaMeans "Die till you get tired of it" in Jola. This name is given to an infant who is believed to be a spirit child who has been coming and going between life and death.
Ketura f Biblical German, Biblical Dutch, Biblical Finnish, Biblical Polish, Biblical French, French (Modern, Rare), Flemish (Rare), Dutch (Surinamese)French, German, Finnish, Polish and Dutch form of
Keturah.
Keuthonymos m Greek MythologyThe first element of this name is derived from Greek κεῦθος
(keuthos) which can mean "the depths" as well as "hidden". It is related to Greek κεῦθω
(keuthō) meaning "I hide, I cover"... [
more]
Kevynne m & f EnglishForm of Kevin, first used in Indiana by the singer; Kevynne Spork
Kex m Arthurian CycleForm of
Kay 2 used by the 12th-century French poet Chrétien de Troyes in his Arthurian romances.
Keyana f African AmericanVariant of
Kiana 2. A known bearer is Lauren Keyana 'Keke' Palmer (1993-), an American actress and television personality.
Keyne f History (Ecclesiastical)Saint Keyne was a 5th-century holy woman and hermitess who is said to have traveled widely through what is now South Wales and Cornwall. The only literary source on the life of Saint Keyne, however, is the
Vita Sanctae Keynae, which was edited by John of Tynemouth and included in his Sanctilogium Angliae Walliae Scotiae et Hiberniae in the 14th century.
Keyshia f African AmericanVariant of
Keisha; also compare
Kecia. Known bearers of this name include Keyshia Cole (1981-), an American R&B singer, and Keyshia Ka'oir Davis (1985-), a Jamaican entrepreneur and the wife of rapper Gucci Mane.
Keyvan m PersianMeans "Saturn (the planet)" in Persian, ultimately of Akkadian origin.
Khaarchaana f YakutFrom Yakut хаар
(xaar) meaning "snow", of Turkic origin. This is also the Yakut name for the milk-white brittlegill, a type of flower, and a reference to the
Snezhana, a Russian fairy tale character.
Khaba m Egyptian MythologyFrom Egyptian
ḫꜥj-bꜣ, possibly meaning "one whose active power appears in glory", from Egyptian
ḫꜥj “rising, shining forth, appearing in glory” combined with
bꜣ “active or efficacious power”... [
more]
Khaemwaset m Ancient EgyptianFrom Egyptian
ḫꜥ-m-wꜣst meaning "he who appears in Thebes", derived from
ḫꜥ "to rise, appear, shine forth",
m "in", and
wꜣst "Thebes (city)". This was the name of several figures in Egyptian history, including a 19th dynasty prince, the fourth son of
Ramses the Great... [
more]
Khæmyts m Ossetian MythologyMeaning unknown. This was the name of a hero in the Ossetian Nart epics, the twin brother of
Uryzmag, and an Akhsartagkata (one of three groups of people in the Nart epics).
Khaganga f SanskritMEANING : 'Ganges of sky'. Here ख means sky+ गंगा means river Ganges or Ganga
Khagendra m Nepali, IndianMEANING : 'chief of birds', Vulture, Garuda. Here खग means birds + इन्द्र means chief, excellent
Khai f ObscureKhai Malik is the daughter of famous model Gigi Hadid and pop singer Zayn Malik after Gigi’s Palestinian grandmother
Khairiah Daher Hadid. Khairiah is also the middle name of Gigi’s sister Bella Hadid, another model.
Khal m Sanskrit, Tamil, Hinduism, Indian, HindiMEANING : threshing-floor, granary, earth, mould, , place, site ,contest, battle, sediment or dregs of oil, butter-milk boiled with acid vegetables and spices, a mischievous man, the sun, Xanthochymus pictorius, the thorn-apple ... [
more]
Khalaf m ArabicMeans "successor, descendant" in Arabic, from the root خلف
(khalafa) meaning "to succeed, to follow". This is an honorific title given to generations of Muslims after the third.
Khaleif m African American, Arabic, Muslim, Arabic (Maghrebi)From the title "Caliph", root
khalīfa, meaning "successor" in Arabic. The title caliph was given to the successors of the Prophet Muhammad, originally elected by the Islamic populace, making it an indirect Quranic name.... [
more]
Khalidin m IndonesianFrom Arabic خالدين
(khālidīn), the plural of خالد
(khālid) meaning "eternal, immortal".
Khalifatullah m Pashto, Urdu, Indonesian, ArabicComes from خليفة الله (
khalifah allah), “representative of God” in Arabic, a term in the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community synonymous with a prophet, seer, or messenger.
Khalifaturrahman m IndonesianComes from خليفة الرحمٰن (
khalifah al-rahman) meaning “representative of the Compassionate” in Arabic
Khalil al-Din m ArabicMeans "friend of the religion" from خليل (
khalil) meaning "friend" combined with دِين (
dīn) meaning "religion, faith"
Khalil Allah m ArabicMeans "friend of
Allah" from Arabic خليل
(khalīl) meaning "friend" combined with الله
(Allah).
Khamani m SwahiliMeaning “son of king”, “first born”, or “great king” in Swahili.
Khamerernebty f Ancient EgyptianFrom Egyptian
ḫꜥ-mrr-nb.tj meaning "the beloved of the two ladies appears", derived from
ḫꜥ "to rise, appear, shine forth",
mrj "to love", and
nbtj "the Two Ladies", a royal title referring to the dual protective goddesses of Upper and Lower Egypt... [
more]
Khampha m & f LaoFrom Lao
ຄຳ (kham) meaning "gold" and
ພາ (pha) meaning "guide, lead" or "light, rays of light".
Khanak f SanskritThe sound of bangles or metal coming in contact with a surface, Sanskrit, India
Khandav m HinduismMEANING : sugar-candy, sugar-plums, sweetmeats, a sacred wood to lord Indra, Name of a forest in Mahabharata... [
more]
Khandmaa f MongolianMeans "ordained woman" in Mongolian, ultimately derived from Tibetan མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ།
(mkha'-'gro-ma) literally meaning "sky-going mother", a kind of female divinity (also called
dakini) in Hinduism and Buddhism that are variously portrayed as goddesses, demons, embodiments of enlightened energy, or spiritually developed human women.... [
more]
Khando f Tibetan, BhutaneseMeans "dakini" in Tibetan, referring to a class of female celestial beings that represent enlightened energy and spiritual practice in Buddhist belief. The word itself literally means "sky-goer" (in the sense of one who moves through the vast, sky-like expanse of wisdom), from Tibetan མཁའ
(mkha) meaning "sky, space" and འགྲོ
(gro) meaning "walk, move, go".
Khandroma f Far Eastern MythologyThe Tibetian name for
Dakini, a spirit or type of spirit in Vajrayana Buddhism. It is reported to mean "skygoer" and may be derived from the Sanskrit
khecara, a term from the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra.
Khane f YiddishYiddish form of
Hannah. This is an earlier form of
Hene,
Henye and
Hende, which are backformations from
Hendl (see
Hendel), itself a diminutive of Khane (now, of Hene).
Khangai m MongolianThe name of a mountain range in central Mongolia, meaning "mountainous pastures, nature, ideal landscape" in Mongolian, or euphemistically "wolf". Alternatively it may derive from хаан
(kaan) meaning "khan, ruler, leader".
Khanim f AzerbaijaniAzeri feminine name derived from the Turkish word
hanım or Azeri
xanım, both meaning "lady". The former is also used as a polite term of address, thus this name is relatively rare.